Your personal attack sounds similar to those who believe a few thousand dollars worth of click-bait swung the 2016 US Presidential election.
Your argument is missing some key elements of how the world really works:
"If you were the Apex Players, you would want to provide the problem, reaction, and solution in thousands of ways, to slowly stumble towards your end goal of total global control while maintaining the illusion of legitimacy. You would exploit and/or fabricate as many forms of divide-and-conquer as you could manage. You would create what is known as the false left-right paradigm.
Therefore, a critical mass of humanity must learn to transcend the false left-right paradigm, which does indeed seem real sometimes because of the natural dichotomy resulting from the many forms of divide-and-conquer by which we are all being played.
The puppet masters must strengthen that which is naturally weak or non-existent, and must weaken that which is naturally strong.
How do you think so many weak factions and so much junk science came to dominate the establishment narrative? That would have been impossible without the hand of the Apex Players, who must use the full weight of the establishment to create and buttress weak factions and junk science.
Likewise, they must use the full weight of the establishment to weaken the natural strength of common sense, objective reality, logic, first-hand experience, tradition, independent thought, and the subconscious, which can process 40 million bits per second. Likewise, these players must use the full weight of the establishment to weaken the natural strength of men, Christians, gun owners, families, communities, white people, and Americans.
The natural dichotomy is thus: that which the establishment strengthens vs. that which the establishment weakens, which means the establishment must try to keep the two roughly equal, and that is why we have the false left-right paradigm, and why we always will have it as long as we have the Apex Players."
A larger percentage have less trust in the media now I think, but you are largely correct, and here's why:
If Hillary had won, the tens of millions who were on the cup of epiphany would have concluded that the system doesn't work, that it doesn't work like we think it does, and that the American government doesn't work for the American people, but because Trump won, they all went back to sleep, and even some of those who already had that epiphany long before were pacified. The Myth of Trump may be just as phony as the Myth of Obama.